The only Vick busier than Michael during the the New Orleans Saints' commanding 21-3 first-half performance against the Philadelphia Eagles was Vick's brother Marcus, who used his Twitter account to throw pretty much every possible aspect of the Eagles organization under the bus as his brother's team was going down fast. Starting from the bottom up ("Game time!"), and as Philly couldn't seem to do anything right, Marcus Vick flat-out blew Twitter up.
After the 28-13 loss was in the books, it sounded as if little brother was in a bit of trouble.
"He tweeted that during the game? I'm sorry. I'm unaware of that," Michael Vick said after the game, when asked if he felt the way his brother does about Vick's teammates. "That's something I'm really going to have to address once I leave here. We're out there fighting as hard as we can, giving it everything we've got, and that's certainly not the case. I love each and every guy in that locker room, and if I could make every play right I would. I know they would do the same, so that's certainly not the case."

Marcus Vick goes on Twitter rant during Eagles-Saints game, and Michael Vick doesn’t like it

(@MVFive)(@MVFive)
Like his brother, Marcus Vick has quite the checkered past. He was unable to stay on the Virginia Tech football team due to on- and off-field issues, and made no real impact in the NFL after the Miami Dolphins gave him a shot as an undrafted free agent following the 2006 NFL Draft. He's been charged with brandishing a firearm, molestation of a minor, fraud, driving on the wrong side of a street, reckless driving, driving on a suspended license, and several probation violations.
Not to mention his inevitable stay in Twitter jail if he doesn't knock it off.

"He says." When you're using present-tense in the third-person you must remember to add the -s morpheme at the end of the verb. You said "he say" when you should have said "he says." You're also the only one to comment on grammaticality.

"He says." When you're using present-tense in the third-person you must remember to add the -s morpheme at the end of the verb. You said "he say" when you should have said "he says." You're also the only one to comment on grammaticality.

Just because the rest of us who have at least mastered the King's English at a grade school level didn't mention it doesn't change the obvious.

My wife is an editor. Worked on major trade publications and newspapers. Teaches journalism in college. She corrects me all the time w/o making an error - just sayn'

Haha oh no I'm not saying it's impossible. I'm just saying people do tend to make errors when they comment on the errors of someone else. It happens more in text. I wouldn't happen verbally. I just thought it was funny that he was so harsh in his ridicule and made a similar mistake. I'm a linguist so I'm aware of different communities having their own grammatical rules. The Vicks are inner-city black folks who grew up around Ebonics speakers. There's also a thing called code-switching where you're perfectly fluent in the Standard language and your nonstandard dialect, and you're capable of switching back and forth between the two depending on the situation. Twitter is an informal social networking site. Most people speak in their home language on a site like Twitter. That doesn't mean that Vick might be so moronic that he doesn't know how or when to speak "proper" English. The commenter (who also made an error) seemed to make this judgment.

Haha oh no I'm not saying it's impossible. I'm just saying people do tend to make errors when they comment on the errors of someone else. It happens more in text. I wouldn't happen verbally. I just thought it was funny that he was so harsh in his ridicule and made a similar mistake. I'm a linguist so I'm aware of different communities having their own grammatical rules. The Vicks are inner-city black folks who grew up around Ebonics speakers. There's also a thing called code-switching where you're perfectly fluent in the Standard language and your nonstandard dialect, and you're capable of switching back and forth between the two depending on the situation. Twitter is an informal social networking site. Most people speak in their home language on a site like Twitter. That doesn't mean that Vick might be so moronic that he doesn't know how or when to speak "proper" English. The commenter (who also made an error) seemed to make this judgment.

A linguist sounds like an interesting field.

Is your focus more verbal or written? Im guessing verbal, but maybe its not an either or but both.